Group spokesman Curtis Morrison says the rally will show solidarity with protestors in New York City and that the movement is about the country’s larger economic disparity and wealth gap.

“I think it’s to put forward an idea that our democracy is not for sale to the highest bidder that corporations do not run this country, that the people should,” he says.

Over the weekend, New York police arrested over 700 protesters for blocking traffic on the Brooklyn Bridge.

Similar protests have sprung up in other cities, including Lexington. Though protestors do not have specific demands, activists have called for the marches to continue until concrete legislative changes and financial reforms are made.

Morrison says the marches are meant to highlight how corporate money is corrupting the country’s political system and that small group control the wealth.

“There’s this word oligarchy, and a lot of people don’t know what that means. It means a 100 people are literally controlling our country,” says Morrison. “And the march is about changing that to where it goes back to what it was meant to be in the beginning where everybody has a say. We don’t have that right now.”

Organizers expect as many as 500 demonstrators to convene on Fourth and Jefferson Streets at noon Tuesday.